Seneca Driver was the father of Cincinnatus Driver. A lifelong resident of Covington, Kentucky, he refused to relocate to Des Moines, Iowa with Cincinnatus and his family after Kentucky's re-admission to the United States following the Great War. During the Second Great War, however, he did leave Kentucky along with his son, a United States citizen, to escape the Population Reduction following the 1942 death of his wife of sixty years, Livia Driver.
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| - Seneca Driver was the father of Cincinnatus Driver. A lifelong resident of Covington, Kentucky, he refused to relocate to Des Moines, Iowa with Cincinnatus and his family after Kentucky's re-admission to the United States following the Great War. During the Second Great War, however, he did leave Kentucky along with his son, a United States citizen, to escape the Population Reduction following the 1942 death of his wife of sixty years, Livia Driver.
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| - Seneca Driver was the father of Cincinnatus Driver. A lifelong resident of Covington, Kentucky, he refused to relocate to Des Moines, Iowa with Cincinnatus and his family after Kentucky's re-admission to the United States following the Great War. During the Second Great War, however, he did leave Kentucky along with his son, a United States citizen, to escape the Population Reduction following the 1942 death of his wife of sixty years, Livia Driver. In Des Moines, he enjoyed spending time with his grandchildren and great-grandchildren. Their presence rejuvenated him and helped him to recover from the loss of his wife.
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